[EuroArts 2072408] BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 9, "Choral" (Karajan, 1Anna Tomowa-Sintow, Agnes Baltsa, René Kollo, José Van Dam Chor der Deutschen Oper Berlin; Berliner Philharmoniker Herbert von Karajan Beethoven, Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic is one of the most perfect combinations ever to have emerged from the classical music world. When the Ninth Symphony is performed at a New Years Eve concert, it becomes an even more spectacular event. Karajans rousing interpretation of Beethoven's most admired symphony has long acquired legendary status. Now Medici Arts is releasing it in a recording made in Berlins Philharmonic Hall on New Years Eve 1977 in celebration of the conductors 100th birthday this year. Born in Salzburg on 5 April 1908, Herbert von Karajan was one of the most widely respected performing musicians appearing in the past century. He influenced fellow musicians and public taste for generations through his live appearances and recordings, especially in the role of Principal Conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, which he led for more than 30 years, moulding the orchestra into an ensemble of peerless power, tonal beauty and stylistic flexibility. The Ninth is an affirmation of optimism and beauty, written when Beethoven was almost completely deaf and the final movement is considered by many to be the composer's crowning glory. It had been Beethoven's lifelong dream to set Schiller's Ode to Joy to music, for the poem expressed the fulfilment of Beethoven's most passionate desire: peace and brotherhood in the world. Giving <b>...</b>

The Very Best of Mozart: Part 1NOTE: To view in HD, click here: www.youtube.com Mozart is one of the greatest composers to have ever lived. Among his towering achievements are a few pieces that speak to me on a level I have never felt with any other composer, past or present. While this list is not definitive, and certainly no list is, it does touch on the broad spectrum of genres for which Mozart is most famous. I encourage you to find these pieces on your own and begin listening to them earnestly and patiently. I assure you, this music is unlike anything you have ever heard or will ever hear. You will be able to always find something new and startling even after a hundred listens. These pieces are classical in their very nature. Thus is the power of Mozart. The List (1-6) 1. Jupiter Symphony - Levine/Chicago Symphony Orchestra 2. Piano Concerto No. 20 - Bilson/Gardiner/English Baroque Soloists 3. The Abduction at the Seraglio - Gardiner/Monteverdi Choir 4. Symphony 40 in G Minor - Maazel/New York Philharmonic 5. Piano Sonata K.545 - Jean Bernard Pommier 6. Requiem in D Minor - Philippe Herreweghe/Orchestre des Champs Elysees

The Very Best of Mozart: Part 2NOTE: To view in HD, click here: www.youtube.com Mozart is one of the greatest composers to have ever lived. Among his towering achievements are a few pieces that speak to me on a level I have never felt with any other composer, past or present. While this list is not definitive, and certainly no list is, it does touch on the broad spectrum of genres for which Mozart is most famous. I encourage you to find these pieces on your own and begin listening to them earnestly and patiently. I assure you, this music is unlike anything you have ever heard or will ever hear. You will be able to always find something new and startling even after a hundred listens. These pieces are classical in their very nature. Thus is the power of Mozart. Top Ten List (7-10) 7. The Magic Flute - Bernard Haitink/Chor und Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks 8. Eine Kleine Nachtmusik - Neville Marriner/Academy of St. Martin in the Fields 9. Symphony No. 5 - Trevor Pinnock/The English Concert 10. Piano Concerto No. 23 - Christoph Eschenbach/London Philharmonic

Mozart: Rondo Alla Turca トルコ行進曲 (older version)Online Piano Lessons! All Levels! 8e992hnjrhia1y8ot3h9tp1x30.hop.clickbank.net Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) has been one of the most enduring composers in history and was the most influential and prominent composer in the Classical Era. Mozart was a child prodigy who was already composing and performing for royalty at age 5 and composed his first opera at age 12. Although Mozart composed in virtually all genres and was especially famous for his serious and comic operas, it was the the piano (pianoforte) that remained the primary source of inspiration throughout his short life. Get Mozart's Complete Sonatas and Fantasias for Piano: www.sheetmusicplus.com Get the excellent Henle edition of the famous K545 Sonata: www.sheetmusicplus.com Get the sheet music to Rondo Alla Turca: www.sheetmusicplus.com BachScholar™ Website: www.bachscholar.com Buy Albums and MP3s: www.cdbaby.com www.amazon.com Download Bach Tempo Studies: stores.lulu.com

Vivaldi's 'Four Seasons'- Pre Concert Talk by David GordonIn the past 70 years, more than 120 recordings have been made of Vivaldi's groundbreaking set of four concerti: The Four Seasons. David Gordon explains what makes this beloved music so memorable and what to listen for. FIlmed by Douglas Mueller. www.bachfestival.org <br /><br />The webpage you are currently viewing is NOT part of the official Carmel Bach Festival website. These videos are posted here as a public educational service by David Gordon and Doug Mueller. <br /><br />For more Festival videos, follow the "carmelbach" link by Bach's picture. <br />

HARMONICA,Chromatic Harmonica,classical Harmonica Music London ROYALClassical Harmonica player Philip Achille wows the classical crowd playing this instrument, Harmonica, future jazz harmoncia legend. This video of champion Achille was viewed on television from the ROYAL ALBERT HALL on BBC2 home of Classical Star. Philip still has lessons (tutorials) taught by Jim Hughes a harmonica legend as a session musician and in the school of players like, tommy Rielly, shellist, Douglas Tate, Larry Adler and Stevie Wonder.HARMONICA, BLUES, Chromatic Harmonica ,Classical Harmonica, Jazz, Harmonica Artist, British Film music, Achille Philip, BBC 2 2007 Proms London Larry Adler, The harmonica playing was accompanied by a full orchestra. Philip Achille (based in London) has experience playing the chromatic harmonica (mouth organ) in many music genres, Jazz Classical Blues and Irish. Philip Achille National Harmonica League nhl festival classical mundharmonika mouth organ player Asia Pacific LD Miller Stevie Wonder Toots Thielemans jazz Lee Oskar blues harp Shellist Tommy Reilly Suzuki Hohner

PLEASE NOTICE:
This is a private recording with a normal camcorder, so please don't blame about the video quality :)

www.koelnerdomchor.de

O Magnum mysterium - Giovanni Gabrieli (1557 - 1612) Latin text withGabrieli's O magnum mysterium consistently and classically counterpoises two contrasting vocal choirs while maintaining its elegant proportions. Gabrieli divides his text, which celebrates the lowliness of Christ's birth on Christmas, into three unequal parts; each receives a musical section of roughly equal length. The opening phrase, "O great mystery," is sung three times: once by the first choir, once by the slightly lower second choir, and a third time in climactic full polyphony. The second phrase of text, which explains that the great mystery and "wondrous sacrament" allowed mere animals to see the birth of the Saviour, takes the same tripartite structure, with a temporal broadening into triple rhythmic groups. The composer packs the most text into the third section, which extols the manger and the blessed Virgin; twice Gabrieli cycles the contrasted vocal choirs, once aspirantly starting with the lower ensemble and rising to the heights. The choral antiphony becomes thus not only a vehicle for grand effect, but also serves to articulate the very structure of the text and to embody its sense. The radiant conclusion of his motet comes in a fourth section, an extended jubilant "alleluia." A series of syncopated, triple-meter antiphonal statements gradually gives way to a broad, eight-voiced tutti. Whether the two choirs braved the logistical challenges of physical separation or merely sang in proximate alternation, the effect added great luster to the Venetian liturgy.

Giovanni Gabrieli - The YouTube Symphony Orchestrawww.youtube.com/symphony Giovanni Gabrieli - Canzon Septimi toni No. 2 as performed by the YouTube Symphony Orchestra @ Carnegie Hall on April 15, 2009.Selected by the YouTube community and several members of the world's most renowned orchestras, the YouTube Symphony Orchestra is made up of over 96 professional and amateur musicians from 30+ countries and territories on six continents and represents 26 different instruments.

THE 5 BROWNS: IN CONCERT | Preview | PBSPreview of new PBS special THE 5 BROWNS: IN CONCERT. The five Brown siblings, all Juilliard-trained pianists, play classical, jazz and standards in this new concert special.Premiering March 2010 on most PBS stations (check your local listings at pbs.org/tvschedules). Support your local PBS station now -- you make it possible for your PBS station to offer amazing performances and the opportunity to discover something new every day, whether on TV or online. To donate to your local PBS station, visit www.pbs.org

SUPER MARIO BROTHERS CLASSICAL GUITAR TABS | Thierry Gomezwww.thierrygomez.com -- One of the most popular videos on YouTube is back and now has its own website. Learn this tune on your own guitar by visiting our website. Thierry Gomez will show you exactly how to play this song. Get the Tabs (with classical notation) on the website as well.

Georg Friedrich Händel: Royal Fireworks Overture [City of Prague PhEPIC ORCHESTRA, including Royal Fireworks and Ma Vlast -- Download for $8.99 at: emhclassicalmusic.bandcamp.com... Facebook.com -- Like us! Listen to more incredible works and download albums! *** The EMH Classical Music Library was created with the belief that there could be better recordings of the world's classical music. The result is a collection of over 200 cuts featuring the great classical works such as Vivaldi's Four Seasons, Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture, Mozart's Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, and Symphony 40 as well as excerpts from Dvorak's New World Symphony and Handel's Messiah, just to name a few. The EMH Classical Music Library is adding brand new recordings all the time. Listen to the audio CDs or find a way to hear it in Surround. Classical music never sounded like this! -------------------------- Listen online, purchase and download via www.EMHClassicalMusic.com. Sunday Morning Classics Series available via Deseret Book at www.DeseretBook.com. Inspirational Classics for a Peaceful Day: Sunday Morning with Bach, Sunday Morning with Beethoven, Sunday Morning with Classical Piano, Sunday Morning With Handel, Sunday Morning With Mozart, Sunday Morning With String Quartet. All pieces available in 24bit/96k 5.1 Surround and Stereo, wet and dry. Follow EMH on YouTube, Twitter and Facebook: Twitter.com/EMHClassical and Facebook.com/EMHClassicalMusic

Swan Lake Ballet Tchaikovsky Act 1 part 1Academical Orchestra St. Petersburg Conductur : W. Fedotov Choreography: Marius Petipa/Leonid Ivanov Ballet of the Kirov Theatre St. Petersburg Odette/Odile : Yelena Yevteyeva Siegfried : John Markovsky Rothbart : Makhmud Esambayev The Fool : Valery Panov The Prince´s Mother : Alla Kabarova Servant : Viktor Ryazanov Historical Recording from 1968 Screen Adaption : Konstantin Sergeyev Director : Appollinary Dudko The four-act ballet Swan Lake,based on a German fairy tale and with music by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky,was first produced in Moscow in 1877 at the Bolshoi Theatre with a choreography by Julius Reisinger and was a total failure.After Tchaikovsky´s death in 1893,a memorial to the composer presented the second act,succesfully recoreographed by Lev Ivanov.In 1895 a completely new version of the ballet,choreographed by Ivanov and Marius Petipa was staged at the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg and this time the ballet received the appreciation that it had rightfully deserved.The new choreography fulfilled the expectations of the Russian public as it added an element of "pressure" to the copmosition. This recording presents a "classical" staging of the ballet from 1968 which based on the Ivanov/Petipa choreography.This Russian screen version of Swan Lake is a colourful and magnificent version of one of the ballet classics of all time,performed by the world.famous Kirov ensemble.

Fantasie Impromptu Practice (Flute & Guitar)"Fantasie Impromptu" By Frederic Chopin Played by: The Asian Mages ok, this is a classical music piece originally for piano but we decided to make a flute/guitar version of it. We haven't had much time to practice, so we make quite a few mistakes, but we'll put on the better, mistake-free (hopefully) version soon. For those that are familiar with this piece, we start from the "slow part" (about 2 min into the song) and then continue through to the "fast part". Andthanks for all your feedback and support! For those of you that have been asking for tabs, we actually don't have any. We usually just find and print out the sheet music from the internet. The flute part is the melody line from the sheet music, and the guitar part is improvised from the chords/background. sorry! And as usual, please feel free to leave us a comment/message if you have any song requests or feedback!

Americas Got Talent - Jackie Evancho 10 Opera SingerThe YouTube.com community picked their favorite Jackie Evancho. She is a young opera singer from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and can be compared to Susan Boyle. Now she may look like an average kid, but this child has a set of pipes. The video entry gave an amazing performance that one person commented sounded like an Angel. Looking to be a very young contestant, there is no doubt she might steal the show.

Bio
Jackie Evancho - 10yrs old - Singer
Jackie has a style that is all her own. At ten years old, she possesses an ability that many older artists lack. Her talent and presence captivate all that hear her. Jackie performs with such style and grace that we forget that we are watching/listening to a child. She has been called by a many, a singing prodigy!

By Jerry Shriver, USA TODAY
When a 10-year-old singer belted out a Puccini aria with the polished voice of someone thrice her age on Tuesday night's episode of America's Got Talent, the "next Susan Boyle!" superlatives flowed across the mediascape. But so did the question: Is Jackie Evancho for real?
The precocious soprano, a Pittsburgh-area fourth-grader who auditioned for the NBC show with a YouTube video, wowed the panel with a live performance of O Mio Babbino Caro. But a video clip appears to show that her lips are ever-so-slightly out of sync with the audio.

Fremantle, the company that produces AGT and Fox's American Idol, makes contestants available only to local media. But "there was no lip-syncing," says producer Jason Raff.

LIFELINE LIVE:More on Jackie, plus see video

During rehearsals, "the whole crew was saying it looked like she's lip-syncing," he says. "And on the close-ups, her mouth is moving a different way than the sound coming out. It is weird, but it's just how she sings."

The voters embraced her happily: On Wednesday's results show, Evancho advanced to the semifinals.

Further testimony to her true talent comes from her track record: Her self-released EP, Prelude to a Dream, has sold around the world, and she has performed with David Foster, sung the national anthem at the Pittsburgh Pirates home opener and appeared on PBS.

"She is just truly blessed with a voice that's phenomenal," says classical-crossover composer/conductor Tim Janis, who is including Evancho in his American Christmas Carol show (Dec. 2) at Carnegie Hall.

A film producer had alerted Janis to Evancho two years ago, and he put her in one of his Celebrate America specials for the Pittsburgh public television station WQED. "Jackie just stood out and shined," he says. Her voice "totally captivated me and sent me to a place that was uplifting and inspiring."

Even if listeners don't know that it's a child singing, "the voice stands on its own. It's a big sound that fills the room."

The reaction recalls the Cinderella story of Boyle, who became an Internet sensation after her Britain's Got Talent appearance and went on to record an album that has sold 9 million copies worldwide.

Evancho trains with at least two vocal coaches, which is essential at her age "to make sure you don't abuse the gift," Janis says. "A young vocalist is in the process of developing those muscles, and you don't overdo it."

He won't speculate whether Evancho, who sings both pop and classical, will choose one specialty. "She has a rare gift to speak to many hearts. In my mind, the classical setting is a really nice match for her voice. But someone who doesn't follow that genre can still appreciate the beauty.

Chopin Mazurka op17 No 4 - Michel Mananes LiveMichel Mananes plays one of the most beautiful Chopin Mazurka No 4 op.17 A minor 13 .All this pieces are played in an "Antique Bosendorfer". With recitals for europa and suramerica specially. He won first prize in several young piano competitions. He is Piano Teacher in Madrid and continue to give concerts.Chopin Mazurca.classical concert pianist.
http://www.geocities.com/pianistmananes/index.html

Frederic Chopin - March 1, 1810[1] -- October 17, 1849) was a Polish[2][3] composer and virtuoso pianist of the Romantic period. He is widely regarded as the greatest Polish composer, and ranks as one of music's greatest tone poets.[4]

He was born in the village of Å»elazowa Wola, in the Duchy of Warsaw, to a Polish mother and French-expatriate father, and in his early life was regarded as a child-prodigy pianist. In November 1830, at the age of 20, Chopin went abroad; following the suppression of the Polish November Uprising of 1830--31, he became one of many expatriates of the Polish "Great Emigration."

In Paris, he made a comfortable living as a composer and piano teacher, while giving few public performances. A Polish patriot,[5][6] in France he used the French versions of his names and eventually, to avoid having to rely on Imperial Russian documents, became a French citizen.[7][8][9] After some ill-fated romantic involvements with Polish women, from 1837 to 1847 he conducted a turbulent relationship with the French writer George Sand (Aurore Dudevant). Always in frail health, in 1849 he died in Paris, at the age of 39, of chronic pulmonary tuberculosis.[10][11]

Chopin composed 58 Mazurkas (there seem to be at least another 2 unfinished sketches) and many of his other works of different genres are either inspired by the Mazurka or have parts of Mazurkas within them. Chopin did, of course, not invent the Mazurka form. However, it was he alone who put the Mazurka on the public stage and refined it into the highest art of music. In his Mazurkas, you get to know the very soul of Poland and Chopin never forgot his home land or the poor farmers singing the Mazurkas during the time of harvest. Chopin started his composing with a Polonaise and ended with a Mazurka, thus closing the circle.

THE SEVEN YEAR OLD SURGEON
"The Seven Year-Old Surgeon" profiles child prodigy Akrit Jaswal from a remote village at the foothills of the Himalayas. By the age of five, Akrit was reading Shakespeare and by seven had performed his first surgical operation.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_eAkdtYay4

5-Yr-Old Violinist Allegro Brilliante Op. 19
The 5-Year-Old violinist is now 6-1/4-yr-old and played W. Ten Have "Allegro Brilliante, Op. 19" using a 1/4-size violin with 1/2-size bow on the Suzuki Level VII Graduation Recital
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mAdmifpfJOo

Film of Hawaii's best Magician as a child
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wg50D8aw-1c

THE WORLD'S STRONGEST BOY
An observational film that follows Richard Sandrak, an 11 year-old child who since the age of 6 has been described pound for pound as the "strongest human being in the world"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esrqV8IVorQ